Posts tagged ‘art’

July 21st, 2010

UMass Lowell Artists Establish Downtown Research Studio

by PaulM

If you are in downtown Lowell for the Lowell Folk Festival this weekend, and everyone reading this should be going to the Festival for at least a few hours, then walk to the intersection of Market, Central, and Prescott streets and look for the Printer on Prescott Artists Research Center. UMass Lowell Art Dept. faculty members Jim Jeffers, Stephen Mishol, and Jan Johnson and Art Dept. alumna Denise Manseau have set up a 4000-square foot art space at 82 Prescott Street, the former location of Patriot Printers. Look for the word “Printer” on the building.

The quartet has as its mission “simply to be contemporary artists working in downtown Lowell and participating in the greater creative economy of Lowell as artists.”

Their vision? “We would like to see Printer on Prescott Artists Research Center expand to become a hub for artists and curators by housing a Drawing Arts Research Center, which would bring contemporary artists to Lowell to deposit works on paper in a flat file and digital online archive. This archive would serve as an oscillating point of art, artists, and curators in and out of Lowell, while in some way benefitting the community culturally and economically.”

Newly opened Printer on Prescott Gallery

The artists chose a fine spot in the heart of downtown and the National Park district. Their back door opens onto the Canalway and a view of the canal-side facade of the UMass Lowell Inn & Conference Center. Their neighbors include Tutto Bene wine and cheese cellar, Daley Designs School of Interiors, Middlesex Community College, and Eastern Bank.

Let’s hope these four are the leading edge of a larger movement of university artists and art department graduates into the downtown, where they will work, live, show, sell, and further energize the cultural community—and that the downtown visual arts scene will be linked more closely to the other creative clusters like Western Avenue Studios via additional signs, shuttle “studio” buses, well-marked bike routes, and other means.

Read the brief news story from UMass Lowell about this artistic venture here.

July 11th, 2010

James Abbott McNeill Whistler – Redux

by Marie

 ”Arrangement in Gray: A (self) Portrait of the Painter” James Abbott McNeill Whistler (1872)

Just the other day I noted a Lowell connection in the current issue of Yankee magazine – a quote from James A. M. Whistler. And now we note that on this day – July 11, 1834 – Whistler was born at home on Worthen Street in Lowell, Massachusetts to George Washington Whistler – a prominent engineer  – and Anna M. McNeill . He briefly attended  West Point but left his unsuccessful experience behind to study art. He was a painter, printmaker, etcher, designer and collector of note who  lived most of his life in England while taking frequent trips to France to study. His wit was legendary. Certainly his famous statement about his birthplace is a good example. Rather than Lowell - Whistler claimed the more exotic St. Petersburg Russia as his birthplace: “I shall be born when and where I want, and I do not choose to be born in Lowell” he declared.  In later years, he would play up his mother’s connection to some Southern  roots, and present himself as an impoverished Southern aristocrat. Whatever his personal eccentricities,  rapier wit and life style, Whister was a great influence in the art and cultural world of his time.

One of my favorite Whistler works  Symphony in White, No. 1: The White Girl (1862), can be seen  The National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. While the largest collection of Whistler’s works including his Nocturnes can be seen at the Freer Gallery of Art also in Washington D.C.

Learn more about Whistler by reading the various biographical sketches here . Learn about the Whistler House Museum of Art here.

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